
I’m still drying my eyes as I write this column about U.S. ski hero Lindsey Vonn and her catastrophic crash during Sunday’s Olympic downhill race.
For anyone who was exploring the Marianas Trench or was stuck on the South Col of Mount Everest without access to the Internet over the weekend, here’s what happened. Vonn, 41, started the Olympic downhill despite having ruptured the ACL in her left knee just days beforehand. After taking an aggressive line through the first few turns, Vonn, alas, hooked a gate about 13 seconds into her run.
The collision spun her around midair, and she tumbled to the icy surface like a ragdoll. Vonn’s race was over, and she was eventually airlifted to a hospital and diagnosed with a broken leg.
Yeah, serious and scary stuff. Cue the tears.
The Internet immediately erupted as it’s prone to do after a major moment of sports drama. Self-proclaimed ACL experts on social media explained how Vonn’s torn ligament led to the disaster. Ski racers clapped back. Fanboys clogged the Outside Facebook to chastise U.S. Skiing for giving the injured Vonn a valuable Olympic spot instead of passing one down to an up-and-comer.
Publishers rushed to publish. Commenters commented on comments. It’s been a fabulous and glorious fracas, and it’s still unfolding.
The incredible tonnage of tweets, essays, and hot takes is proof of the power of Vonn’s story—it’s powerful enough to make at least one dude in his forties well up. This reaction only happens when a massive population feels the tug of emotion all at the same time. And while the cloud of powder is still settling on the Vonn crash, I think it’s worth discussing why the comeback, the injury, and the crash have resonated with the masses.
You see, every four years media outlets try to cram Olympic storylines down the throats of American audiences, but few of them actually stick like this one. Vonn’s comeback is in some ways the perfect Olympic story—happy ending be-damned.
There are elements of her journey over the past year that seem like they were ripped from a Hollywood script—yes, even the tragic end. Our famous but past-her-prime hero saddles up for one more go at glory, kicks serious butt, but ultimately falls short. Yet in her disaster, a new ingenue steps into the spotlight.
After Vonn’s crash, another American, Breezy Johnson, won the gold medal, stamping her place in U.S. Olympic history. Back in 2021, Vonn actually called Johnson her successor. Hardcore fans of ski racing know about Johnson, but she’s now a bona fide Olympic hero, and Vonn’s crash helped open the door for her to shine.
Vonn’s story is also relatable in a way that most Olympic storylines are not. It’s no secret that it’s hard for the American public to relate to a 20-year-old super athlete who does nothing but train, race, and recover.
Yet any schmo over 40 who has ever played pickup basketball, gotten back in the gym, or entered an amateur bicycle race is familiar with Vonn’s arc over the past 12 months. You return to your favorite activity with a head full of steam, show initial progress and maybe even attain the same level of kickass you had in your twenties, only to learn the hard way that your body isn’t 25 anymore.
In one grim moment, Vonn, who for years was someone the general public simply could not connect with, became the Patron Saint of all middle-aged weekend warriors.
And finally, there’s an aspirational element of Vonn’s comeback involving risk. Rocking down an icy slope at 70 miles per hour while nursing a torn ACL requires a certain level of insanity—or is it bravery?
Vonn thumbed her nose at the odds. She took on a crazy challenge despite the high probability of disaster. I’m guessing that 99 percent of the global population isn’t wired that way. And I’m sure that many readers—and yeah, writers too—wish we were.
In the coming months Lindsey Vonn will recover from her broken leg, and she’ll have her ACL surgically repaired. She will return to the ski slopes and to the interview circuit. My guess is that Vonn will, in time, mentally and emotionally move on from her crash in Cortina.
But those of us who followed the whole will always remember it. Because Lindsey Vonn’s comeback and crash accomplished the one goal that all sports strive to achieve. It made us feel something.
The post The Lindsey Vonn Comeback Was Still a Perfect Olympic Story appeared first on Outside Online.